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A BUG is a sort-of DIY modular computing device. At its core is BUGbase which is a small form-factor Linux box with a number of connectors and a tripod mount(!). You can then just plug together any number of modules: accelerometer, Camera, GPS, keyboard, etc, add a little bit of software and make the portable device of your dreams.

As they say: "For example, with BUG, you can easily assemble and program a GPS + digital camera device that automatically publishes geo-tagged photos as a web service. Integrating with an online photo-sharing service like Flickr is only a few more lines of code away, and now you have your own real-time, connected traffic-enabled mobile Webcam!"

The BUG appears to be aimed at the "long tail" of gadgets. Those niches that are too small to be viable for the mass produced, purpose build, consumer electronics industry. I wonder what kind of ideas people will come up with for a device like this. Any suggestions?

I think it was Rob who told me about how spammers are using porn sites to decode Captchas.

Captchas are those fuzzy images containing words, letters or numbers that you have to type in on web-sites to prove that you are a human being. The idea is to make it more difficult for bots to automatically sign up for sites where they can inject spam messages or, more usually, web-site links that then help to improve the target site's Google ranking.

So the clever spammers have started grabbing the Captchas from these sites and putting them in front of porn sites. The porn site users are only too eager to decipher the Captcha so that they can get to see the goods. The spammers then immediately use the result to get access to the original site.

While there is some evidence that this might just be an urban myth, it is a smart implementation of the principle that I mentioned during my talk about how web-sites can glean small fragments of data from large numbers of users and then aggregate it into large useful datasets. Amazon, with their Mechanical Turk have industrialised the whole principle.

So, today I came across another interesting application of Captchas. The School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon has developed a service called reCAPTCHA. It uses words that have been taken from scanned books that cannot be deciphered by conventional OCR techniques. The results are passed back to reCAPTCHA where they are assembled to create a digitized version of the original text. Their strap-line Digitizing Books One Word At A Time says it all really.

Two words are shown for each Captcha, one of which has a known answer and the other unknown. The user doesn't know which is which so the have to type in both words. If the known word validates correctly then it is assumed that the unknown word has also been entered correctly. Once an unknown word has been deciphered correctly it can be used as a known word in the future. The whole thing is extremely clever and well thought out.

I especially like the way that it provides a protection service for web-sites while at the same time performing a valuable service that digitizes books from the The Internet Archive. A real win-win service.

We asked delegates to fill out a feedback form. We kept it simple, there was only one question: How was it?

Thank you to everyone who took the time to tell us what you thought.

Here is the best of them:

And here are the worst of them:

Full disclosure: These feedback comments are unedited, except we have cropped those where people signed their names, and cropped one (positive) sentence that would have disclosed an author's identity. All feedback forms completed at the conference have been included above. A few comments were also received subsequently by email, but I can't find where Michelle has filed them. I believe they were all positive.